Integrated optical phased arrays (OPAs) have enabled cutting-edge applications where optical beam steering can benefit from chip-scale integration. However, the majority of integrated OPA demonstrations to date have been limited to showing far-field beam forming and steering. There are, however, many emerging applications of integrated photonics where emission of focused light from a chip is desirable, such as in integrated optical tweezers for biophotonics, chip-based 3D printers, and trapped-ion quantum systems. To address this need, we have recently demonstrated the first near-field-focusing integrated OPAs; however, this preliminary demonstration was limited to emission at only one focal plane above the chip. In this paper, we show the first, to the best of our knowledge, spiral integrated OPAs, enabling emission of focusing beams with tunable variable focal heights for the first time. In the process, we develop the theory, explore the design parameters, and propose feed-structure architectures for such OPAs. Finally, we experimentally demonstrate an example spiral integrated OPA system fabricated in a standard silicon-photonics process, showing wavelength-tunable variable-focal-height focusing emission. This work introduces a first-of-its-kind integrated OPA architecture not previously explored or demonstrated in literature and, as such, enables new functionality for emerging applications of OPAs that require focusing operation.
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Vernier optical phased array lidar transceivers
Optical phased arrays (OPAs) which beam-steer in two dimensions (2D) are currently limited to grating row spacings well above a half wavelength. This gives rise to grating lobes along one axis which limit the field of view (FOV), introduce return signal ambiguity, and reduce the optical efficiency in lidar applications. We demonstrate a Vernier transceiver scheme which uses paired transmit and receive phased arrays with different row periodicities, leading to mismatched grating lobe angular spacings and only a single aligned pair of transmit and receive lobes. This permits a return signal from a target in the desired lobe to be efficiently coupled back into the receive OPA while back-scatter from the other grating lobes is rejected, removing the ambiguity. Our proposal goes beyond previously considered Vernier schemes in other domains like RF and sound, to enable adynamic Vernierwhere all beam directions are simultaneously Vernier aligned, and allow ultra-fast scanning, or multi-beam, operation with Vernier lobe suppression. We analyze two variants of grating lobe suppressing beam-steering configurations, one of which eliminates the FOV limitation, and find the conditions for optimal lobe suppression. We present the first, to the best of our knowledge, experimental demonstration of an OPA Vernier transceiver, including grating lobe suppression of 6.4 dB and beam steering across 5.5°. The demonstration is based on a pair of 2D-wavelength-steered serpentine OPAs. These results address the pervasive issue of grating lobes in integrated photonic lidar schemes, opening the way to larger FOVs and reduced complexity 2D beam-steering designs.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1817174
- PAR ID:
- 10368201
- Publisher / Repository:
- Optical Society of America
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Optics Express
- Volume:
- 30
- Issue:
- 14
- ISSN:
- 1094-4087; OPEXFF
- Format(s):
- Medium: X Size: Article No. 24589
- Size(s):
- Article No. 24589
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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